This classic volume deals with the strategies of both
psychotherapists and clients as they maneuver each other in the
process of treatment. How a therapist induces a client to change is
described within a framework of interpersonal theory and directive
family therapy. This work represents a step from the study of
therapy in terms of the individual to therapy as communication
between at least two people. In this volume, Jay Haley acknowledges
his debt to the Gregory Bateson research project exploring the
nature of communication as well as to Dr. Milton H. Erickson, M.D.
for the many hours of conversations and a new perspective on the
nature of therapy. The reactions to this different view continue to
be controversial today in the therapy field.
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